Skip to main content

Windows 8

 
So why not upgrade to Windows 8? The upgrade is cheap. It's very easy, just download the updater program and the computer does it all for you. I did it the other night, but on the whole I'm still asking that question.

Windows 8 seems to run a bit faster than Windows 7 did on my Acer desktop computer, but it has crashed on every one of the four days I've had it, so it's about par for the course for a new Windows operating system.

Once the installer has done its party piece and the new system is up and running the computer reboots to give you essentially, two different GUIs which you switch between. One of them is pretty much identical to Windows 7 except that the start button is missing from the bottom left hand corner of the screen.The other GUI is accessed by moving the mouse into parts of the screen - the Right hand border or the bottom left corner and clicking. This second GUI is the array of brightly coloured patches illustrated above, each of which opens into an app. It is modern, easy to use and quite slick, although it seems to have been designed for a touchscreen computer with functionality for an ordinary desktop tacked on as an afterthought. Most of the apps work pretty well, but many of them seem to be in beta form, at best. For instance there is a map program which does absolutely nothing, and that is not an exaggeration. It has a dot which is supposed to be my present location, but it is set to some street address in Auckland, over 1600 km away and there is absolutely no way to reset it.  It gives me a standard zoomable map but there is no search function, no street view, no anything. What's the point of it? A very elegant weather app similarly assumed that I lived in Auckland, although with a great deal of effort I found a workaround  so that it now tells me what the weather is doing at my place.There is integration of my email and all my social networking accounts and my address book, but it is all a little too automatic and a little too much linked into Microsoft's Bing suite of programs for my liking. I can't even start up the computer without logging into my brand new Microsoft account. There is very smooth access to the media players, and all that side of things works quickly and smoothly, but I don't actually use my desktop computer as a media player very often. Why sit in my study when the family TV has more comfy chairs in front of it, has better speakers and can access the internet just as easily as my PC?

But here's my beef. It does very well all of the things I might want to do on a tablet or telephone, but not very well all those things I might want to do on a mouse driven desktop PC. Flitting back and forth between the two GUIs quickly becomes a pain: for example closing down the computer now involves 4 mouse clicks compared to the 2 required for Windows 7. I suppose there will be a flood of updates before long, making the system a little more compatible with desktop computing and hopefully a little more stable, but in the meantime,  as far as desk top machines go, Microsoft seem to have abandoned their roots and left the field wide open for the only remaining operating system which is purpose built for PCs, Mac OS X

Comments

Merv said…
hmmm...
still no comment.
Kate said…
One is never too 'cracked on' to move to Apple.
Anonymous said…
I'm no Mac OS X fan.

However Windows 8 is lacking for sure, and may be a non starter like Vista, for the moment; - for the very reason's you've laid out so clearly in your blog post.

In tests, WIN8 can crash NZ corporate applications while one is trying to get work done on them.

Its networking side is incompatible at present, with many relational databases.

Some database managers (at universities, corporates) have advised users to hold off from logging into databases using the new windows 8 OS (as it stands) because it crashes database applications.

In my view, if you are a company of any size, remain with, or migrate to “Windows 7” until
“Win8” is fixed, or superseded. As you say it may get better with updates. It still feels like a beta.

If one is a student, perhaps work on a mac, or better yet stick to windows 7 :-)

Great review Bishop Kelvin,

Julian.

Popular posts from this blog

Camino, by David Whyte

This poem captures it perfectly Camino. The way forward, the way between things, the way already walked before you, the path disappearing and re-appearing even as the ground gave way beneath you, the grief apparent only in the moment of forgetting, then the river, the mountain, the lifting song of the Sky Lark inviting you over the rain filled pass when your legs had given up, and after, it would be dusk and the half-lit villages in evening light; other people's homes glimpsed through lighted windows and inside, other people's lives; your own home you had left crowding your memory as you looked to see a child playing or a mother moving from one side of a room to another, your eyes wet with the keen cold wind of Navarre. But your loss brought you here to walk under one name and one name only, and to find the guise under which all loss can live; remember you were given that name every day along the way, remember you were greeted as such, and you neede

Kindle

 Living as I do in a place where most books have to come a long way in an aeroplane, reading is an expensive addiction, and of course there is always the problem of shelf space. I have about 50 metres of shelving in my new study, but it is already full and there is not a lot of wall space left; and although it is great insulation, what is eventually going to happen to all that paper? I doubt my kids will want to fill their homes with old theological works, so most of my library is eventually going to end up as egg cartons. Ebooks are one solution to book cost and storage issues so I have been  using them for a while now, but their big problem has been finding suitable hardware to read them on.  I first read them on the tiny screens of Ipaqs and they were quite satisfactory but the wretchedness of Microsoft Reader and its somewhat arbitrary copyright protection system killed the experience entirely. On Palm devices they were OK except the plethora of competing and incompatible formats

Ko Tangata Tiriti Ahau

    The Christmas before last our kids gave us Ancestry.com kits. You know the deal: you spit into a test tube, send it over to Ireland, and in a month or so you get a wadge of paper in the mail telling you who you are. I've never, previously, been interested in all that stuff. I knew my forbears came to Aotearoa in the 1850's from Britain but I didn't know from where, exactly. Clemency's results, as it turns out, were pretty interesting. She was born in England, but has ancestors from various European places, and some who are Ngāti Raukawa, so she can whakapapa back to a little marae called Kikopiri, near Ōtaki. And me? It turns out I'm more British than most British people. Apart from a smattering of Norse  - probably the result of some Viking raid in the dim distant past - all my tūpuna seem to have come from a little group of villages in Nottinghamshire.  Now I've been to the UK a few times, and I quite like it, but it's not home: my heart and soul belon

En Hakkore

In the hills up behind Ranfurly there used to be a town, Hamilton, which at one stage was home to 5,000 people. All that remains of it now is a graveyard, fenced off and baking in the lonely brown hills. Near it, in the 1930s a large Sanitorium was built for the treatment of tuberculosis and other respiratory ailments. It was a substantial complex of buildings with wards, a nurses hostel, impressive houses for the manager and superintendent and all the utility buildings needed for such a large operation. The treatment offered consisted of isolation, views and weather. Patients were exposed to the air, the tons of it which whistled past, often at great speed, the warmth of the sun and the cold. They were housed in small cubicles opening onto huge glassed verandas where they cooked in the summer and froze in the winter and often, what with the wholesome food and the exercise, got better. When advances in antibiotics rendered the Sanitorium obsolete it was turned into a Borstal and the

Return to Middle Earth

 We had a flood, a couple of weeks back, and had to move all the stuff out of the spare bedroom, including  the contents of two floor to ceiling book cases. Shoving the long unopened copies of Sartor Resartus and An Introduction to Byron into cartons, I came upon my  copy of The Lord of the Rings . Written in the flyleaf are the dates of its many readings, the last one being when I read it aloud to Catherine, when she was about 10 or 11, well over 20 years ago. The journey across Middle Earth took Catherine and me the best part of a year, except for the evening when we followed Frodo and Sam across the last stretches of Mordor and up Mount Doom, when we simply couldn't stop, and sat up reading until 11.00 pm, on a school night.  My old copy is a paperback, the same edition that every card carrying baby boomer has somewhere on their shelves. The glue has dried and hardened. The cover and many of the pages have come loose. I was overcome with the urge to read it again, but this old